Dealing
With Temptation CGF-03-FDN-MAT
Everyone faces
temptation. But the truth is, very
few people deal with it effectively. That shouldn’t be the case, and it doesn’t
have to be the case for believers. There are some very simple and effective
ways of dealing with temptation that you should know, and if you’ll put them
into practice, I guarantee, you’ll come out the winner.
It has been said, “Fail
to plan and you’re planning to fail.” That statement could not be truer
when it’s applied to temptation. I don’t know anyone who gets up in the morning
and prays to fail when faced with temptation, but I know many people who get up
each morning and fail to plan for what the Bible says we will all certainly
face. So, first and most important, you must be prepared. That’s so
simple, you have to have someone’s help to misunderstand. But, we must have had
a lot of help because very few people have taken the time or made the effort to
prepare.
Second Chronicles 12:14
says it this way,“And he did evil, because he prepared not his heart to seek
the LORD.”This was speaking of Rehoboam, the king of Judah and the son of
Solomon. He started off as a good king who was seeking the Lord. But just like
many people today, he wasn’t prepared for what would inevitably come his way.
When Satan throws temptation your way, if you’re not already prepared, it’s too
late. You’ll probably lose the fight.
Jesus prepared Himself.
He spent thirty years getting ready for His encounter with the devil, and He
started preparing early. At the age of twelve, He was asking questions of the
doctors of the Law and astounding them with His answers. He had obviously spent
many hours reading and studying the Scriptures. I’m sure that study continued
all His life, but even Jesus needed more.
Before He was tempted by
Satan face to face, He was anointed with the Holy Spirit at His baptism by John
in the Jordan River. Jesus went into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil,
full of the power of the Holy Spirit.
Being filled with the
Holy Spirit is an absolute necessity for overcoming temptation. There are many Christians who received the Holy
Spirit years ago and haven’t been full of the Holy Spirit a day since. It’s not
about what happened to us long ago; we have to stay full of the Holy Spirit.
One way of doing that is to speak in tongues on a regular basis. Jude 1:20-21 says,
“But ye, beloved,
building up yourselves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost, Keep
yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ
unto eternal life.”
Praying in tongues
builds us up on our most holy faith. How many times have you needed your most
holy faith to take you through a certain trial, and yet you haven’t used this
gift of the Holy Spirit? Verse 21 also says we keep ourselves in the love of
God when we speak in tongues. Have you ever asked the Lord to pour out His love
on you? I imagine you have, but this doesn’t say to pray that way; it says we
are to keep ourselves in the love of God. We do that by speaking in tongues. We
don’t ask God for that which He’s already given, we simply stir up the love that
has already been commended toward us, by speaking in tongues. This is a
powerful gift. Isaiah 28:11-12 says,
“For with stammering
lips and another tongue will he speak to this people. To whom he said, This is
the rest wherewith ye may cause the weary to rest; and this is the refreshing:
yet they would not hear.”
Do you ever need rest or
refreshing? I guarantee that you do, and this verse says speaking in tongues is
the way to get it. We have a tremendously powerful gift available to us through
the Holy Spirit, but few people take advantage of it. Instead, we ask God to do
what He told us to do. We need to use this gift of speaking in tongues to stir
ourselves up, or we risk sinking to the bottom.
You must also know who
you are. Matthew 4 and Luke 4
record the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness. One of the most amazing
aspects of those temptations was that Satan began two of the three temptations
with the words, “If thou be the Son of God.” Many people have missed this
point. The real temptation was Satan’s attempt to get Jesus to doubt who He
was. That’s the same way he attacked Adam and Eve. The serpent told Eve
that if she would eat the forbidden fruit, she would be like God (Gen. 3:5).
The truth was that she was already like God, but she didn’t know it. The first
Adam sinned, because he didn’t know who he really was. The second Adam, Jesus,
didn’t sin, because He did know who he was. Knowing your true identity in
Christ is one of the greatest defenses you can possibly have against
temptation.
Jesus had just heard His
Father speak to Him in an audible voice saying,“This is my beloved Son, in
whom I am well pleased” (Matt. 3:17).There was also a visible sign from God
when the Holy Spirit descended on Jesus in the shape of a dove. Jesus had to
anchor His faith in who His Father said He was. But immediately, Satan came to
Him saying,
“If thou be the Son of
God, command that these stones be made bread” (Matt. 4:3).The real temptation was never about turning stones
into bread. It was Satan’s attempt to manipulate Jesus into doubting His
Father’s Word and doing something to prove who He was. Satan was trying to find
and exploit any insecurity in Jesus.
When you were a kid, I’m
sure someone at some time dared you to do something stupid. The real issue
wasn’t whether or not you could do it but whether you were “afraid” to do it.
And sad to say, many of us took the dare and did something that hurt us or
shamed us just to prove that we weren’t. All we really succeeded in proving was
that we feared their disapproval so much that we weren’t willing to do what was
right. The truly fearless response would have been to walk away, secure in who
we were, earning their respect through character rather than performance.
Satan was daring
Jesus—”If You’re really the Son of God, if what You heard from the Father in an
audible voice is really true, then prove it, and turn this stone into bread.”
Turning a stone into bread would not have been sin. It would have been sin if
Jesus had doubted the words of His heavenly Father declaring who He was by
placing more faith in what a miracle could say about Him. You must know who you
are if you want to overcome temptation. No matter what form Satan’s temptations
may take, they are all directed at causing us to doubt who we are.
It’s also important to
understand that all temptation is rooted in selfishness. In fact, our
selfishness is really Satan’s beachhead. Jesus stripped him of his power
two thousand years ago, so the only thing he can really do is deceive us
through our own selfish desires. The Bible tells us exactly what they are in 1
John 2:16,“For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust
of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.”
And in James 1:14 we
read,“But every many is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and
enticed.”
Satan is not limitless;
deception is his only weapon. All he can do is try to deceive us into thinking
that God really can’t or won’t fulfill our lives. Every single temptation of
the enemy is packaged in the form of the lust of the flesh, the lust of the
eyes, or the pride of life. But they’re all designed to entice us and cause us
to doubt that God will meet our needs. Selfishness is always the favorite
playground of the devil, and when selfishness rules in our lives, we open the
door to his deceptive schemes.
You can’t be tempted
unless you have first thought about it. All temptation is linked to what you think on. Therefore, control
your thoughts, and you will control temptation. This is a simple but profound
truth. It’s the reason most people fall into temptation. It’s like a woman who
doesn’t want to get pregnant but continues to have sexual relations without any
contraception. Sooner or later, she will get pregnant. Think on the wrong
things long enough, and sooner or later you will fall into sin when tempted.
Philippians 4:8 says
this,“Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are
honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever
things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any
virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.”Temptation will
come, but it’s hard for the devil to deceive you when your mind is stayed on
those things. Satan can only work with what you give him, so don’t give him any
space in your mind. You’ll be able to avoid many of the temptations you face if
you will put this into practice.
The Word is powerful—use it. Jesus countered
every temptation of the devil with the Word. Think about it, Jesus was the
Word, and everything He said would have been Scripture and more than sufficient
to rebuke the devil. Yet He would say, “It is written” then He quoted God’s
Word. If it was important for Jesus to quote the Word, it’s even more important
for us to do the same. We must know God’s Word to effectively overcome
temptation. That goes back to being prepared; you can’t quote scripture you
haven’t learned, and there isn’t any power in what you don’t know or understand.
Don’t wait till you’re
in the middle of a huge temptation to start thinking about how to deal with it; it will be too late.
Take the time now to prepare yourself for those temptations that will
inevitably come your way.